In the end of January there is the traditional guild feast with our 16th century guild, and this time I want my fiancé to join us, so he needs something to wear. I have started on a shift for him, which also gives me a chance to try out some new techniques.
Back in 2018 I did a very simple shift.
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Me wearing the shift in Visby |
It had loose open sleeves, and the neck was just gathered into a collar band, no smocking of anything fancy like that. I have used it quite a lot, and then in 2020 I faked it into a fancy shift by removing the collar and replacing it with a bought gold ribbon instead. The plan had always been to refashion it into something better, and now when David needed a shift I decided to start from the old shift.
The shift was a female length shift, so I cut off around 20 cm from the bottom, and then I lengthened the sleeves instead with the fabric that I had cut off.
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Trying out the shorter lenght and longer sleeves on David |
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Then it was all about preparing smocking at the cuffs and neck |
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The finished cuff, with the visible seam where I added the cut off bottom of the shift.
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For smocking I decided to do stemstitches on top of the pleats, which can be seen in portraits from the period. I have also read a discussion on how whether the honeycomb smocking that is seen everywhere today is more of a reenactment fashion than what was actually used. Using this also makes it nice to work with white linen thread, which is a look that I have always preferred instead of blackwork. The cuff is closed with two pieces of fingerbraided strings. Now it's on to the other cuff and the neckline.
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